Vehicle class

Motorhome recovery in the UK

Coachbuilt motorhomes, A-class motorhomes and panel-van conversions up to 7.5 tonnes. Recovered by extended flatbed or underlift depending on overhang and habitation door position.

Up
Weight band
24/7
Dispatch
PAS 43
Operator standard
12
Compatible services
Vehicle class

Motorhome recovery

Weight band
Up to 7,500 kg with habitation load
PAS 43 equipment
Heavy-duty flatbed or full underlift, extended-bed truck for A-class

cheap car tow is a booking and price-publication service. The recovery itself is performed by an independent PAS 43 compliant operator dispatched at the published rate. See terms for the operator-panel arrangement.

Flatbed recovery truck loading a car at the roadside, daylight
Flatbed recovery truck loading a car at the roadside, daylight

Operator equipment

Heavy-duty flatbed or full underlift, extended-bed truck for A-class

  • Habitation gas isolation is checked before lift; the operator turns off the propane bottle at the regulator.
  • Habitation door and locker locks are checked to confirm they are secured before the vehicle leaves the scene.
  • Where a motorhome contains personal effects, an inventory is recorded but the contents are not insured against incidental movement.
Motorhome

Motorhome recovery in detail

section

What defines the motorhome class

Coachbuilt motorhomes, A-class motorhomes and panel-van conversions up to 7.5 tonnes. Recovered by extended flatbed or underlift depending on overhang and habitation door position.

Weight band: Up to 7,500 kg with habitation load. Equipment fitted to the recovery vehicle: Heavy-duty flatbed or full underlift, extended-bed truck for A-class.

  • Habitation gas isolation is checked before lift; the operator turns off the propane bottle at the regulator.
  • Habitation door and locker locks are checked to confirm they are secured before the vehicle leaves the scene.
  • Where a motorhome contains personal effects, an inventory is recorded but the contents are not insured against incidental movement.
insight

Lift technique and PAS 43 procedure

The lift technique is chosen at the scene based on the vehicle's driveline, ground clearance, and any prior damage. The operator records the technique and the strap points on the recovery sheet so the receiving garage knows where the vehicle has been handled.

All lift equipment used on the vehicle is examined under LOLER 1998 and operated under PUWER 1998. The recovery vehicle itself operates under the GB Domestic Drivers' Hours Rules where the work is non-commercial recovery.

Load security after lift is checked against the DVSA load security guidance. The Construction and Use Regulations 1986 set the legal envelope: a vehicle on the bed has to be secured so that ordinary acceleration, braking and cornering forces are resisted with the published safety factor.

by the numbers

Compatible services for motorhome

Every service in the cheap car tow catalogue lists which vehicle classes it supports. For the motorhome the supported services are:

  • Roadside jump start: From £70.
  • Out of fuel delivery: From £75.
  • Flat tyre swap: From £75.
  • Lockout assistance: From £75.
  • Local tow under 10 miles: From £120.
  • Regional tow 10 to 50 miles: From £240.
  • Long distance tow over 50 miles: From £460.
  • Motorway recovery: From £340.
  • Accident recovery: From £320.
  • Illegal parking removal: From £240.
  • Abandoned vehicle removal: From £260.
  • Scrap and end of life pickup: From £120.

Bands are indicative; final quote confirmed at booking. See the pricing page for the full methodology and the variables that move the band (distance, time of day, vehicle class).

the moment

Insurance and recovery cover

Most comprehensive motor policies include some form of recovery cover, either as an annual breakdown subscription bolt-on or as a one-off recovery clause. The wording in the schedule is what matters; Association of British Insurers summaries are a useful start.

Where you pay us directly at the scene we issue a VAT invoice that the insurer can reimburse subject to the schedule wording. Where the insurer pays us directly under an instructed recovery the driver does not pay at the scene.

For an EV recovery some policies include an EV-specific clause covering flatbed transport to a charge point; check the schedule before assuming a generic policy covers it.

in the press

What to tell the dispatcher about your motorhome

Vehicle class affects which truck is dispatched. To match the right equipment quickly the dispatcher needs: vehicle class (Motorhome), weight (within Up to 7,500 kg with habitation load), registration mark for keeper verification, make and model, the destination address, and any unusual access constraints such as a low-clearance car park or a CAZ-restricted area.

For a motorhome the equipment carried is: Heavy-duty flatbed or full underlift, extended-bed truck for A-class. A truck with the wrong equipment cannot safely lift the vehicle; getting the class right at booking saves a re-dispatch.

Key takeaway · 06

Where the vehicle ends up

Default destination is the address you nominate at booking. Where no destination is named the operator delivers to their secure compound; the keeper collects within the published storage window on payment of the daily rate from the pricing page.

End-of-life vehicles go to an Authorised Treatment Facility published in the Environment Agency directory. The keeper receives a Certificate of Destruction once the ATF has depolluted and destroyed the vehicle under the End-of-Life Vehicles Regulations 2003.

Council-instructed removals go to the council's contracted compound. The release procedure (notice period, fees, payment method) is set by the council and is not subject to change by us.

section

Common issues we see on motorhome recoveries

Wrong equipment dispatched: most often caused by a misreported vehicle class at booking. Reading the V5C class field at the scene before calling fixes most of these.

Access blocked: a multi-storey car park with under-2.0m clearance will not accept a standard flatbed. Tell the dispatcher and a smaller-bodied truck is dispatched.

Lost or wrong keys: a flatbed lift does not require ignition keys. A spec-lift or wheel-lift on a vehicle with an electronic steering lock might; the operator switches to a flatbed where the steering lock is engaged and cannot be released.

Damaged tyre stops self-recovery: many drivers attempt to limp on a partially deflated tyre and damage the rim. A tyre swap or tow under the flat tyre swap service is almost always cheaper than a new alloy.

insight

Environmental and emissions context

Recovery trucks are subject to the same Clean Air Zone, Low Emission Zone and ULEZ regimes as private vehicles. Where a recovery is dispatched into a charging zone the band includes the operator's compliant vehicle by default.

For an EV recovery, the flatbed-only requirement is partly a battery-safety measure and partly an inverter-protection measure: a permanent-magnet motor generates a back-EMF when the road wheels turn without battery power, which can damage the inverter even on a short distance.

Defra publishes the live Clean Air Zone status and Transport for London publishes the ULEZ status by postcode; check before booking if you are unsure whether the recovery destination is inside a charging zone.

by the numbers

Why the published rate is the same regardless of where you book from

The operator panel is paid on the same framework wherever it is dispatched. That means a Stirling driver and a Southampton driver booking the same service on the same vehicle class see the same indicative band. The driver-side experience is identical; the operator-side cost is normalised by the panel agreement.

Per-mile pricing on long-distance work follows the same pattern: the per-mile rate is published in the pricing page and is the same across the UK. There is no urban discount and no rural surcharge.

the moment

Reading the recovery sheet for a motorhome

The recovery sheet has five main blocks: identification (vehicle class, registration, keeper), timeline (call, dispatch, arrival, lift, drop), technique (strap points, lift type, any winch), photos (as-found, at lift, at drop), and notes (pre-existing damage, access issues, ATF route).

On a motorhome the technique block records: Heavy-duty flatbed or full underlift, extended-bed truck for A-class. Strap points are noted with reference to the manufacturer workshop manual where one is carried in the cab; for older vehicles the operator uses the published chassis points.

The recovery sheet is the document your insurer or onward garage asks for. The driver-side copy lands in the email address given at booking; a paper copy is available at the scene on request.

in the press

Roadside scene management before the lift

Working at the roadside next to a motorhome is a managed-risk operation. The operator parks the recovery vehicle behind the broken-down vehicle so the rear flashing beacons face the line of approaching traffic. Where ground conditions are uneven the operator deploys stabilisers before lift.

PAS 43 specifies the minimum hi-vis garment standard (BS EN ISO 20471 class 2 or 3) and the beacon-cover specification. Both are part of the working-at-roadside specification administered by HSE workplace transport guidance and are inspected as part of the annual PAS 43 audit.

Where the recovery is on a live carriageway the operator coordinates with the relevant highway authority for a lane closure if needed. On a motorway the closure is requested through National Highways regional traffic officers; on an A-road or urban road the local highway authority manages the closure where one is needed.

Key takeaway · 12

Documentation that travels with the vehicle

On a motorhome recovery the documentation set includes: the V5C registration document or DVLA vehicle account screenshot, the photographic recovery sheet, the operator's PAS 43 panel reference, the LOLER thorough-examination date for the lifting equipment, and any insurance instruction reference.

Where the recovery is insurer-instructed the insurer's claim reference is recorded on the sheet. Where the recovery is council-instructed under the Refuse Disposal (Amenity) Act 1978 the council's enforcement officer reference is recorded.

End-of-life motorhome recoveries produce a Certificate of Destruction issued by the Authorised Treatment Facility under the End-of-Life Vehicles Regulations 2003. The keeper sends a copy to DVLA so the vehicle is removed from their record; see gov.uk guidance.

section

Cross-border and inter-jurisdictional motorhome recoveries

Recovery from England into Scotland (or vice versa) is a normal long-haul booking on the same published rate. The legal frameworks diverge in places: the Refuse Disposal (Amenity) Act 1978 applies in England and Wales; Scotland uses the Civic Government (Scotland) Act 1982 sections 99 to 103 for the equivalent powers; Northern Ireland uses the Pollution Control and Local Government (NI) Order 1978.

Police forces also differ. Police Scotland covers all of Scotland (a single force since 2013). The Police Service of Northern Ireland covers Northern Ireland. England and Wales have 43 territorial forces. The operator records the relevant force on the recovery sheet where the recovery is police-instructed.

Ferry legs for Northern Ireland or the Isle of Wight are itemised at the published sailing rate; the recovery band itself does not change for an island leg. The driver sees the ferry surcharge before payment.

insight

Disposal of consumables and contaminated materials

Where a motorhome recovery follows a collision or breakdown that has dropped fluids on the carriageway, the operator either deploys an absorbent granule on the spill or, for a larger spill, calls the highway authority for a specialist clean-up. Hydrocarbon and battery-electrolyte spills are governed by the Hazardous Waste Regulations 2005.

Used oil, used filters, used coolant and used brake fluid recovered from a damaged motorhome are routed through the Authorised Treatment Facility's hazardous waste stream. The ATF holds the relevant permit under the Environmental Permitting (England and Wales) Regulations 2016 (or the Scottish equivalent).

EV-specific contaminated materials (a damaged lithium pack, contaminated coolant from a damaged battery cooling loop) are routed to the small number of ATFs licensed for high-voltage battery handling. The keeper does not see this routing; the operator handles it under the panel agreement.

by the numbers

Primary sources cited on this page

Every factual claim on this page is anchored to a primary source on a UK government, statute, BSI, HSE or charity-consumer-advice domain. The sources list below is shown in full at the bottom of the page; each link opens in a new tab.

We do not link to commercial review sites or aggregator directories. We do not publish star ratings because we have not wired a verified review feed; the operator panel logos and the PAS 43 status are the only forms of social proof we display.

Compatible services for motorhome

Primary sources cited on this page

Common questions

Frequently asked questions

Is a flatbed used by default for a motorhome?

Equipment is chosen at the scene; the operator picks the lift technique that protects the driveline and underbody for the class.

Do you handle a non-runner?

Yes; a flatbed lift does not require the vehicle to start. The operator winches with a soft strap from the published chassis points.

Can my insurer pay for the recovery directly?

Most comprehensive motor policies cover recovery as part of the schedule; the insurer is invoiced directly where the recovery is instructed by them.

Will my keys be needed?

Flatbed transport does not require ignition keys. A wheel-lift may require the steering lock to be released, in which case the operator switches to a flatbed instead.

What if the vehicle is in a multi-storey car park?

Low-clearance car parks require a smaller-bodied truck; tell the dispatcher at booking and a height-compatible operator is sent.

Where is the recovery sheet sent?

By email to the address given at booking; a paper copy is available at the scene on request.

Can I sit in the cab during the tow?

Yes, where the recovery vehicle has a passenger seat fitted. Additional passengers travel separately.

Book motorhome recovery

Published price, PAS 43 compliant operator, 24/7 dispatch.

Book recovery on the TowManVan app